There was an attempt at a D-Day thread which inspired a question about the M1 Garand and how the airborne trooper deployed it.

The night of 6 June 1944 a some friends, now old and some gone, stepped out of C-47's into the night over St Mere Eglise. Last weekend I was standing in the atrium lobby of the Airborne and Special Ops museum in Fayettevill NC, outside Ft Bragg. There are two displays, the first of which is a mannequin hanging from the ceiling under a 1944 silk parachute in full 1944 jump gear. Behind that display there is a display of a present day trooper under an MC-4 with oxygen, ruck, and his M-16 strapped horizontally across his torso.

In 1944 the rifle was strapped to the upper right leg of the soldier in a canvas bag. My understanding, and looking at the display, is that the M1 breaks down into maybe 2 parts which are put back together after landing, and hopefully before having an immediate need for that weapon.

Can an M1 owner explain the breakdown and reassembly that these guys did?

Thanks!

Wes

P.S. The one place in France where they still love Americans is St Mere Eglise.

I don't think they jumped with their rifles disassembled. They were jumping behind enemy lines, often while getting shot at. It wouldn't do you much good to jump into enemy territory and have to take the time to assemble your rifle while surrounded by the enemy in the open. Also not all WW2 paratroopers carried the M1. One thing I will add is that it was a common occurrence for those leg bags to get ripped off from the prop blast as they were jumping.

Often troops were issued a heavy,padded canvas case for their rifle. Most veterans discarded it or used it to carry other supplies. They new hitting the ground running was necessary. Carry methods varied with the individual. The Germans,on the other hand, routinely jumped without rifles. They were dropped in separate containers. Once on the ground the German soldier had to locate this container to acquire his equipment.

Man that's rough. I cant imagine having to jump into enemy territory without my rifle ready to go. Very interesting though and thanks for the bit of information. In retrospect, it probably would have been a better idea to issue paratroopers back then with a collapsible stock. Have to remember though that before WWII paratroopers did not exist, so I guess everything has a learning curve.

The use of the Griswold Bag required the rifle to be broken down into the three main groups (actually you could put the trigger group back into the action).
Later the riggers sewed extension snouts onto them so that people could jump with it assembled.

As was accurately shown in the TV series "Band Of Brothers" many paratroopers jumped with the M1 rifle assembled and secured under the parachute harness.
This is so when they landed they could immediately open fire.

This came out of the Normandy jump when many paratroopers lost their bagged rifles when all their equipment was torn off and lost when panicked pilots failed to reduce speed for the drop.
Second, many Normandy paratroopers came down in the midst of German troops, and a lot of them were killed or captured before they could assemble their weapon.
After Normandy, most paratroopers jumped with whatever weapon they were issued fully assembled and ready to fire, if necessary even before they landed.

In the "Band Of Brothers" you see preparations for the Market-Garden jump when the Normandy men started helping new replacements gear up.
They show the experienced men removing M1 rifles from the drop bags and showing the new men how to secure it in the harness fully assembled.

As a side note, a major reason Ordnance experimented with an M1 "Tanker" carbine was not from requests from the Pacific, most requests came from the European paratrooper commanders like General Gavin.
Gavin and the others hated the M1 Carbine and considered it to be under powered an unreliable.
They wanted a shorter M1 rifle that could be more easily jumped fully assembled and ready to use.

a member of the 501ST PIR.
REcall he indicated the assembled rifle in padded bag along right hand side of body , think he said the lower end was loosle restrained with length of rope to allow wallking and anyone could did obtain a sidearm.

The Airborne operations on Operation Neptune (the airborne invasion of Normandy) had a number of highly flawed "good ideas" gear-wise. One was having to jump into enemy territory with a disassembled rifle (modern paratroopers jump with a rifle ready to go when they hit the ground). It;s my understanding that by the time Market Garden rolled around, they'd mostly done away with the weapon case, and just wrapped their rifles for the jump (also my understanding that the M1 carbine was more for NCO's, RTO's, Scouts, etc, and everyone else got a Garand).
Another sweet [officer] idea was the Airborne Leg Bag which was basically a duffle bag with a length of rope and a cuff that attached to the poor sucker's leg. The idea was that you threw this bag out of the plane and then had to beat the slack out the door. It was finalized and actually issued something like 3 days before Neptune kicked off.... and wasn't used since.

It wasn't until the M1950 weapon case came out that there was a case designed for the entire fully assembled rifle to be jumped. The 82nd still uses it today (slightly modified to ensure it stays closed in the prop blast), it's major plus being that it is adjustable to the length of your weapon. Inside, a Paratrooper can place anything from an M-4 (fully assembled, with 203 and a couple magazines) to an M-240B (though the barrel and receiver are disconnected for the jump). The case clips to the right side of your parachute harness, and the bottom gets tied around your leg. The reason you didn't see this on the modern guy in the ASOM is that guy is a HALO jumper, and isn't rigged for a static line MASSTAC jump.

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